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MEMORIAL 



TO 



COMMODORE JOHN BARRY 



FATHER OF THE NAVY OF THE UNITED STATES 



SOCIETY OF THE 
FRIENDLY SONS OF ST. PATRICK 

For the Relief of Emigrants from Ireland 

PHILADELPHIA 

1907 



Gift 

Tb'- Society 



Ei2on 




GENERAL THOMAS J. STEWART 

President The Fcicndly Sons of St Patrick. 1907. 




HE SOCIETY OF THE FRIENDLY SONS OF ST. PATRICK 
was organized March 17, 1771, for the purpose of rendering aid to 
the emigrants from Ireland. From the moment of its inception 
to the present time, the Society has not only fulfilled the object for 
which it was organized, but its members have ever shown the 
spirit of patriotism that has illumed the pages of the Republic's history. 

On the roll of the twenty-four original members we find the names of men 
who afterwards became distinguished in our country's cause in the war of the Revo- 
lution. Not less than fifteen of its members became general officers in that war 
and served under Washington from the beginning to the end. During several 
years when the Revolution was in progress, the meetings of the Society had to be 
suspended because nearly all the members were absent in the patriot army, fighting 
for the independence of our country. 

Not only was the Society represented in the army but, from the very first 
shot fired in the Revolution, many of its members were enrolled in the infant 
navy. Andrew Caldwell, one of the charter members of the organization, was 
appointed commander of the Navy of Pennsylvania, organized to defend the city 
against the naval forces of Great Britain. He commanded the fleet which repelled 
the attack of the British ships " Roebuck" and " Liverpool," which came up the 
Delaware River on the 8th of May, 1776. 

With many of its members defending the new Republic on land and sea, 
there were still others who rendered almost as, if not more, important service by 
supplying Washington with the means to continue the war and, at a meeting held 
the 17th of June, 1780, twenty-seven members of the Society subscribed and con- 
tributed to " support the credit of a bank to be established for furnishing a supply 
of provisions for the armies of the United States" the sum of Three Hundred and 
Fifteen Thousand Pounds. 

One of the members of the Society has been justly called the Father of the 
Navy of our Republic, — John Barry, born in County Wexford, Ireland, in I745- 
A passion for maritime life, which he displayed at an early age, led him, at the 
age of fourteen or fifteen, to come to America where he obtained employment on 
a merchant vessel of Philadelphia. On September 29, 1766, we find him regis- 



tered as master of the schooner " Barbadoes," 60 tons; In May, 1771, of the 
brig "Patty and Polly," and on August 21, 1771, of the schooner "Industry," 
45 tons; on October 9, 1772, of the sloop " Peggy," 25 tons, and on December 
19, 1774, of the ship "Black Prince," 200 tons. On January 2, 1769, he was 
elected a member of the Society for the Relief of Poor and Distressed Masters 
of Ships. At the breaking out of the Revolution, to use his own language, he 
abandoned " the finest ship and the first employ in America" and entered into the 
service of his adopted country. In 1775 he was. by the Marine Committee of 
Congress, appointed to fit for sea the "Lexington," of 14 guns. He was 
commissioned as Captain December 7, 1775- the same day John Paul Jones was 
commissioned as Lieutenant of the " Alfred." After river and shore duty Cap- 
tain Barry, in the "Lexington," went to sea on March 31. 1776. and on April 
7th he captured, off the Capes of Virginia, the sloop " Edward." belonging to the 
" Liverpool" frigate and brought her to Philadelphia, the first prize taken under 
Continental authority. The frigate " Effingham," to which he was subsequently 
assigned, being useless, owing to the suspension of navigation, he organized a 
company of volunteers and as an Aide to Washington assisted in the operations at 
Trenton, and continued with the army during the winter campaign, performing 
important services and winning admiration and respect. In September, 1778, he 
was appointed to the command of the frigate " Raleigh," 32 guns, which then lay 
at Boston, and on the 25th went to sea. The ship was subsequently lost after a 
warm engagement with two superior British vessels, but he escaped with most of 
his crew. In 1780 he was appointed to the command of the frigate " Alliance," 
36 guns. Upon May 29, 1781, while cruising with the " Alliance," he came into 
contact with two British vessels, the " Atalanta" and the brig " Trepassy." He 
ordered them to haul down their colors, and upon their refusal an engagement with 
them was commenced. During the fighting Captain Barry was wounded in the 
shoulder and, after remaining on deck for some time, was compelled by loss of 
blood to be carried below. The colors of the " Alliance" being shot away, the 
enemy supposed she had struck. One of his lieutenants went to Barry and repre- 
sented to him the great injury the ship had sustained, and asked if he would sur- 
render. " No," replied Barry, " if the ship can't be fought without me. I will be 
carried on deck." The reply animated the crew to renewed exertions and, a favor- 
able wind enabling the " Alliance" to pour a broadside into the enemy, and before 
the dressing of his wounds would permit him to reach the deck, both the enemy's 




MONUMENT TO COMMODORE JOHN BARRY 

FATHER OF THE AMERICAN NAVY 

Erected by the Society of The Friendly Sons ot St. Patrick, in Independence Square, Pliiladelpliia, March l(3th, 1907 



vessels, after a battle which lasted nearly the whole day, had struck their flags. 
In the succeeding fall he was ordered to refit the " Alliance" for the purpose of 
carrying the Marquis de Lafayette and Count Noailles to France on business. In 
March, 1783. the "Alliance" left Havana for the purpose of convoying the Ameri- 
can sloop-of-war " Luzerne," having on board a large amount of specie. The 
appearance of a British squadron proved a severe trial to the naval skill and 
dauntless courage of Captain Barry. The specie was removed to the " Alliance" 
and the valuable treasure saved, after a battle on March loth with the " Sybille," 
an English man-of-war wliich had been captured from the French two months 
before. This was the last battle of the Revolution. It was fought after the 
Articles of Peace had been signed at Paris on February 3, 1783. Under the law 
of March 27, 1794, he was appointed by President Washington Senior Captain of 
the United States Navy, and from this appointment his title of " Father of the 
American Navy" appears to have arisen. The title Commodore was not created 
at the time, but by courtesy was extended to Barry and other Captains who had 
charge of more than one ship. Under President Washington's administration he 
superintended the building of the frigate " United States," of which he retained 
the command until she was laid up in ordinary during the administration of Presi- 
dent Jefferson. During the difficulties with France, in 1798, he was employed in 
protecting our commerce from depredation. 

In the later years of his life, he resided at No. 186 Chestnut Street, between 
Ninth and Tenth Streets, where he died on September 13, 1803, of an asthmatic 
affection. He was buried in St. Mary's Catholic Churchyard, Fourth Street above 
Spruce. Over his remains "a few of his countrymen, members of St. Mary's 
Church, and others" erected the present tomb on July i, 1876, to replace the one 
erected by his widow. 

A century after the death of this great patriot and eminent son of Ireland, 
the Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, in 1905, resolved to honor and per- 
petuate his memory by erecting a statue in Independence Square in Philadelphia, 
near the spot where he received his commission as Senior Captain of the Ameri- 
can Navy from the hands of Washington, and at a meeting on June 17th of that 
year, General St. Clair A. Mulholland offered the following resolution: 

Resolved, That a committee of six be appointed by the President to report, at our next 
quarterly meeting, on the advisability and cost of erecting in this city a bronze statue of John Barry, 
at one time a member of this Society, Senior Captain and Father' of the United States Navy. 



The resolution was unanimously agreed to, and the Chair appointed the fol- 
lowing Committee: 

General St. Clair A. Mulholland, Chairman. 

Reverend J. Grav Bolton, D.D. 

Hon. Edwin S. Stuart. 

Rear-Admiral George W. Melville, U. S. N. 

Hugh McCaffrey. 

Henry B. Tener. 

The Committee thus appointed called for estimates and models from some 
eminent sculptors, and eight models were furnished. The Committee selected from 
among them the model submitted by Mr. Samuel Murray, a prominent artist of 
Philadelphia, and in accordance with the resolution, at the quarterly meeting, Sep- 
tember 17, 1905, General Mulholland, Chairman of the Committee, submitted the 
following report: 

That the committee recommend that a statue of Commodore John Barry be erected, and 
that the model submitted by Samuel Murray be adopted. 

The resolution was freely discussed and all urged its adoption-. 

The following resolution was then offered and unanimously approved: 

Resolved, That the report of the Committee appointed at the last meeting for the erection 
of a statue to commemorate the memory of Commodore Barry be approved, with their selection 
of the model submitted by Samuel Murray, and that $10,000 be appropriated by this Society for 
the erection thereof at such place as the Committee shall select. 

The contract for the bronze statue was then awarded to Mr. Samuel Murray 
and the contract for the granite base to the Harrison Granite Coinpany. The 
ordinance authorizing the placing of the memorial in Independence Square read 
as follows : 

AN ORDINANCE 
Authorizing the Mayor to accept the bronze statue of Commodore John Barry of the United 
States Navy, donated to the City of Philadelphia by the Society of the Friendly Sons of 
St. Patrick of Philadelphia, and requesting the Department of Public Safety to set apart a 
site in Independence Square for the purpose of placing thereon said statue. 

Section i. The Select and Common Councils of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, that 
the Mayor be authorized and directed to accept the bronze statue of Commodore John Barry of 
the United States Navy, donated to the City of Philadelphia by the Society of the Friendly Sons 
of St. Patrick of Philadelphia, and the Department of Public Safety be authorized and directed 
to set apart a plot of ground in Independence Square not more than 15 feet square as a site for 
the location of said statue. 




COMMODORE JOHN BARRY 



From the original by Gilbert Stuart, now in possession of VV. Horace Hepburn, Esq. 



At the quarterly meeting, September 17, 1906, General Mulholland, Chair- 
man, on behalf of the Committee, reported that the contract for the bronze figure 
of Commodore Barry was progressing and that everything would be ready for the 
unveiling and dedication at our March anniversary, 1907. He also presented and 
read a resolution and copy of ordinance to be presented to His Honor the Mayor, 
requesting that he forward same to Councils and pray for their favorable action. 

DEDICATION CEREMONIES 

And so, on the eve of St. Patrick's Day, March 16, 1907, the one hundred 
and thirty-sixth anniversary of the foundation of the Society, the magnificent 
memorial, in commemoration of the inspiring deeds of a great Irish-American hero, 
and to perpetuate the memory of the man who was the Father of the American 
Navy, was dedicated beneath the rays of the sun which broke forth with the 
brilliancy of later spring, amidst the plaudits and cheers of tens of thousands of 
citizens. 

The bronze statue itself- is nine feet, six inches in height and rises above a 
pedestal of Barre granite, twelve feet high. The Irish hero of the Revolution is 
typified in a commanding attitude. With hand outstretched, he seems to be direct- 
ing his men on board of vessel to fire another broadside. An admiral's great 
coat of those days envelops his form, under one arm he carries a naval spy-glass, 
and his sheathed sword is by his side. The sculptor has achieved an expression 
in the features which seems typical of Commodore Barry. In front, the pedestal 
bears the simple word " Barry." On the rear of the pedestal is the following 
inscription: "Commodore John Barry, U. S. N., Father of the Navy, born in 
Wexford, Ireland, 1745, died in Philadelphia, September 13, 1803. Presented to 
the City of Philadelphia by the Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, 1907." 

For the occasion a guard of honor, consisting of a battalion of United 
States sailors and marines, with the Naval Band, was furnished by the Navy 
Department. The Secretary of the Navy was represented by Captain John M. 
Miller, and the Secretary of War was represented by General W. P. Duvall. The 
great-great-grandniece of Commodore Barry, Miss Elise Hazel Hepburn, was 
present to unveil the statue. A procession was formed in Independence Hall of 
the members of the Society, who, together with the specially invited guests, 
marched through the Square to the platform erected for the speakers. 



'* 



MISS HEPBURN WAS A DAINTY PICTURE 

Prettily attired in white silk, wearing a becoming picture hat and carrying a 
basket of roses, Miss Hepburn was given the place of honor on the speakers' plat- 
form. Although only twelve years old, the young girl was perfectly composed 
and self-reliant, as was befitting a descendant of Commodore Barry. Mrs. Hep- 
bum, her mother, is a daughter of Captain P. Barry Hayes, who was the 
youngest son of Patrick Hayes, a nephew of Commodore Barry. Miss Hepburn 
is, therefore, a great-great-grandniece of the man to whose memory so many 
people did honor. 

After a prayer offered by the Right Reverend Alexander Mackay-Smith, 
Bishop of Philadelphia, General Thomas J. Stewart, as President of the Society, 
introduced Miss Hepburn. She stepped to the front of the platform and while 
the eyes of the throng were centered upon the flags hiding the statue, eager to 
catch the first glimpse of its beauty, pulled tlie silken rope. 

A clapping of hands and cheers greeted the memorial to the hero. The 
bronze figure, with a particularly expressive and commanding face, standing in 
the sunlight, proved a complete climax to the preliminaries for its revealing. The 
Navy Band struck up the " Star Spangled Banner," at which heads were bared. 
The crowd stood still and mute while the national anthem was played. 



GENERAL STEWART'S EULOGY 

General Stewart delivered an eloquent eulogy upon Commodore Barry, 
referring to him as one of the leaders among the galaxy of men responsible for 
America's independence. 

Mayor Weaver's speech in accepting the statue for the city was in the 
nature of a tribute to Barry as an Irishman and to Irish-Americans in general. 
" God has been good to America," he said, " in giving her so many brave and 
worthy sons of Ireland, among whom John Barry stands among the best." 

The life of Commodore Barry and his accomplishments were outlined by 
Admiral Melville, who told of his twenty victories without a single defeat, against 
an enemy of superior force. " He nailed his colors to the mast and never struck 
them during his career." 

Samuel Murray, sculptor of the statue, was then introduced. 




MISS ELISE HAZEL HEPBURN 



Besides the guests already mentioned, who were seated in the grand stand, 
there were Rev. C. Q. Wright, Chaplain of the " Lancaster," representing the 
Qiaplains at League Island; John M. Campbell, Major-General J. P. S. Gobin, 
United States Marshall John B. Robinson, Martin L J. Griffin, author of " The 
Life of Commodore John Barry;" Michael J. Ryan, Major Levi MacCauley, 
John McGrath, James J. Ryan, Congressman George D. McCreary, Rev. J. Gray 
Bolton, General C. Bow Dougherty, Edward J. Dooner, Lieutenant-Colonel Lewis 
Beitler, Hugh McCaffrey, Esq.. Thomas D. Ferguson, Esq., Hon. William 
McAleer and W. Horace Hepburn, Esq. 

At the conclusion of the ceremonies, hundreds of persons made a pilgrimage 
to St. Mary's Church, Fourth Street between Spruce and Walnut, to visit the tomb 
of Commodore Barry, which stands in the rear of the edifice. Upon the marble 
slab is inscribed an epitaph, outlining the life and virtues of the hero. A wreath 
also lay upon the tomb, a tribute from The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. 

General St. Clair A. Mulholland. Chairman of the Committee appointed to 
erect the memorial, in making the reports of the Committee, referred to Commo- 
dore Barry as an early member of the Society, whose name would go down to 
future generations as a brilliant son of Ireland and a great and true American. 

" This monument," said the speaker, " is a memorial to the founder and 
father of the navy that, from Barry to Dewey, has been the pride and glory of the 
Republic. It is appropriate and altogether proper and right that the memorial 
should be placed on this spot, on sacred ground, made sacred and holy by Barry 
and the men who with him gathered here to bring into existence this nation and 
the best form of government with which Almighty God has ever blessed mankind. 

" The Committee desires to express its gratitude and thanks to the Mayor 
of our city, to the members of the City Councils, to the Director of Public Safety 
and to all who have made our work pleasant and agreeable." 

General Thomas J. Stewart, President of the Society, in presenting the 
memorial to the City of Philadelphia, spoke as follows : 

" As President of this honorable and historic Society, and representing the 
membership thereof, I find great pleasure in conveying the thanks and congratu- 
lations of the Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, to the Committee that 
has so successfully and so acceptably completed the work committed to them, as 
evidenced by the splendid statue of Commodore John Barry that now stands com- 
pleted and unveiled before us. 



" Tills statue is the fitting and grateful tribute of the Society to one of its 
members, and to a noble and faithful patriot and officer of the American Navy, 
in the formative and fateful days of this great nation, a nation whose commis- 
sion and confidence he enjoyed, whose sword he carried, and for whose glory he 
fought, more than a century ago. The infant navy, of which John Barry was 
designated by Washington as the Senior Captain, and of which he was the first 
Commodore, to-day commands the respect of every nation in the world. It has 
grown great and strong through more than a century of magnificent achievements 
and deeds of wondrous valor and heroism. From Commodore John Barry to 
Admiral George Dewey, the American Navy has given to the naval annals of 
the world a great host of conspicuous and mighty names, and among these names, 
shining in brilliancy of achievement, loyalty and unsurpassed bravery, are found 
those who, either by birth or lineage, are of that race whose sons have written in 
blood the story of Irish courage and devotion, wherever the war banners of 
this Republic were unfurled in battle, or where, amid the carnage of mighty con- 
flict, brave men sank, uncofifined and unhonored, to their eternal resting place in 
the beautiful gardens of the sea. 

" Here, under the shadow of Independence Hall, the Cradle of Liberty, is the 
fitting place to rear this tribute to one of that galaxy of great men who made way 
for Liberty, and who steadied the infant steps of the Republic that to-day sits 
enthroned in majesty among the nations of the Earth, all of whom pay tribute' 
to her might, acknowledge her greatness, and salute her flag. The faith the 
founders pledged, their sons have kept, the glory they hoped for we have seen, 
the things they prayed for we have won, the institutions they created we have 
saved, and transmit unimpaired to the generations that shall follow us in the days 
yet to be. 

" Within sight of this spot the first Continental Congress met, and here was 
given to the world the sublime Declaration of Independence, that from the day it 
was first publicly proclaimed by being read in public by Colonel John Nixon, the 
son of an Irishman, to this day, has been recognized as the grandest document 
ever conceived by brain, or written by pen of man. In support of that Declara- 
tion, a young Irishman, 31 years of age, John Barry, to use his own language, 
' abandoned the finest ship and the first employ m America,' and offered his ser- 
vice and, if need be, his life. Of his great service and glorious deeds, during the 
period of the American Revolution, and the years immediately thereafter, a distin- 

10 



guished officer of the American Navy, and a member of the Society, will speak. 

" The life of John Barry, and the lives of patriots and men like him, are an 
unfailing inspiration, and occasions like this awaken in our hearts a deeper love 
of country, and a truer and holier and loftier devotion to the institutions and 
principles that make and keep a people and a nation great and strong. 

" Every nation, or people, or race, that left an impress upon its time, had or 
has its battlefields and its heroes, and we have ours, and we to-day pay tribute to 
one of our heroes. The tribute may seem to be tardily paid, for he for whom 
this tribute is placed has been resting peacefully in his grave near this spot for 
more than a hundred years. Generations of men have come and gone since he 
lived and, though his ' bones are dust and his sword is rust,' he still has a place 
in the affections and love of his countrymen, and this great city where he lived 
and died counts him among those of cherished memory, and cheerfully and gladly 
accords his statue a place within the holiest and most sacred plot of earth within 
her gates. Here it will have the companionship of the statue of the immortal 
Washington, with whose great work he was identified, and with whom he was a 
co-laborer in the cause of Liberty. It will have the companionship of these his- 
toric buildings, and here will gather about it the spirits of the brave men who 
stood with him where ' red battle stamped her foot and nations felt the shock.' 
We know that in this patriotic city no vandal hand will mar its beauty, none will 
fail to comprehend its meaning, or question the lesson of patriotism, loyalty and 
devotion to country it shall teach, and now, on behalf of the Society of the 
Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the successors of John Barry and his associates, 
I have the honor to present to the City of Philadelphia, through its honored Chief 
Executive, in the presence of its Common and Select Councils, in the presence of 
these representatives of the United States Army and Navy, and in the presence 
of this goodly assemblage of the citizenship of the patriotic City of Philadelphia, 
this statue of Commodore John Barry." 

The Honorable John Weaver, Mayor of Philadelphia, in accepting the work 
on behalf of the City, spoke as follows : 

" Mr. President, Members of the Friendly Sons 

of St. Patrick, Ladies and Gentlemen: 
" I feel it a very great honor to be called upon, as Chief Executive of this 
great City of Philadelphia, to accept from your Society this magnificent statue of 
Commodore John Barry. 

11 



" It is a singular coincidence that on the very day (October 13, 1775) that 
Captain John Barry, of the mercliantman ' The Black Prince,' arrived in this 
city from Bristol, England ; I say on that very day the Continental Congress sitting 
here resolved to fit out two armored cruisers, one of fourteen, and the other of 
ten guns. It was another coincidence that ' The Black Prince,' the merchant 
vessel that Captain Barry gave up at that time, belonged to John Nixon — the 
very man that in July of the next year read on this very ground the Declaration 
of Independence and in such tones that it was heard around the world. Two 
vessels were purchased and named tlie ' Lexington' and ' Reprisal.' Captain 
Barry was appointed to the command of the ' Lexington,' named after the first 
batde of the Revolutionary War. It was not till March, however, that he got 
the ' Lexington' ready and put to sea, yet within two weeks had captured and 
brought a prize to this city And he kept up the good work, whether as Captain 
of the ' Lexington' or later as Captain of the ' Effingham,' named after the 
British Lord who resigned his commission in the English Army rather than fight 
the Americans, or when the English had captured Philadelphia, and the war- 
vessels of the Colonies were compelled to retreat up the Delaware above Burling- 
ton, he plotted and planned to destroy the British shipping, and brought about 
the laugliable ' Battle of the Kegs' and subsequently passed Philadelphia by night 
in armed boats, and attacked and seriously crippled the British shipping and sup- 
plies in the lower Delaware to such an extent that he received the thanks and con- 
gratulations of General Washington. 

" But of all the vessels he commanded at all times his career as Captain of 
the frigate ' Alliance' is, perhaps, the most worthy of notice. Early in 1781 
he carried Colonel Laurens on an important mission to France, capturing an 
English privateer on his way over and releasing from her custody a Venetian 
ship which had been captured by the English privateer, contrary to the Law 
of Nations and every principle of justice. The crew of the Venetian vessel 
had been put in irons and cruelly treated, and Captain Barry released them and 
restored their vessel out of ' respect for the law of nations and the rights of 
neutrality.' The return voyage of the ' Alliance' was full of incidents. She 
convoyed the French letter-of-marque ship ' Lafayette,' laden with supplies for 
the Continental Army, and within a few days after leaving the French coast 
Captain Barry discovered a well-formed conspiracy to mutiny, which he quickly 
broke up in a very vigorous manner, and then he captured four ships of war and 

12 



several merchant vessels on his way home. He continued his victorious career, 
carrying the Marquis Lafayette to France in January, 1782. 

" What could this country have done in the dark days of the Revolution 
without those brave fighting sailors. General Washington said to Lafayette in 
November, 1781 : 'It follows then as certain as that night succeeds the day that 
without a decisive naval force we can do nothing definite, and with it everything 
honorable and glorious. A constant naval superiority would terminate the war 
speedily. Without it I do not know that it will ever be terminated honorably.' 
We have never honored our naval heroes sufficiently, and I am glad to see this 
splendid monument to the gallant fighting Captain John Barry, of the Continental 
Navy, and to Commodore John Barry, the first Commander of the new Navy of 
the United States. He served his country well, and all posterity should do him 
honor. 

" I congratulate the Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick upon the 
completion of this monument and, in accepting it from you in behalf of the City, 
I thank you in the name of all our citizens for your thoughtfulness and generosity 
in thus placing Barry in enduring bronze, and honoring the memory of one of the 
great naval heroes of the Revolution." 

Admiral George W. Melville then delivered a splendid oration on the life 
and services of Commodore Barry. He said : 

"Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: 

" We are assembled here to-day not to chant the miserere, or a dirge for the 
dead, but in joyful numbers to sing the praises of one of the most heroic char- 
acters of the time of the Revolution. Of one who did as much as, if not more 
than, any other man to secure for you and me, — and, let us hope, for our remotest 
posterity, — the liberty of this great Republic! 

" The subject of our paeans to-day was a ' seaman' in all that it means : An 
officer of the Navy before we had a Navy. A man in the acceptation of the ancient 
and honorable meaning of the word. He could not only sail, manage and navi- 
gate his ship all over the world, but could build, rig and equip her, and also could 
place, man and fight her guns. This he did on many occasions, as his brief his- 
tory of to-day will tell. He was no ' kid-gloved' mariner. 

" The man to whom I refer is Commodore John Barry — ' Old Jack Barry,' 
as he was lovingly called by those who knew him. But to us of a later genera- 

13 



tion, his name and the record of his deeds make him ' Fighling Jack Barry/ the 
' Father of the American Navy.' He it is whom we are assembled to honor 
to-day by the dedication of this magnificent monument of bronze and stone, the 
gift of the Society of tlie Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, which counted among 
its members George Washington as well as John Barry. 

"John Barry was an Irishman, born in 1745 in the town of Ballysampson, 
and lived his boyhood days in the townland of Roostonstown, Wexford County, 
in the Province of Leinster, until the age of 15 years, when he went to sea, 
probably first on his own coast, and later to the West Indies. Finally he arrived 
in Philadelphia, and was, when about 21 years of age, honorably employed in his 
profession as master mariner by the leading merchants of Philadelphia, trading 
to the West Indies. Thus, early in life, he showed the virility of manhood, with 
the power to command men and to merit the respect of his employers. 

" Captain Barry returned from sea in his good ship the ' Black Prince,' in 
October, 1775, when the first opportunity offered to consecrate his life and great 
ability as a seaman to the cause of the American Colonies. The ' Black Prince' 
vvas purchased by the Congress, fitted out and placed under command of Commo- 
dore Esek Hopkins and Captain Salstonstall. and renamed the ' Alfred.' It was 
at this time in his history that Captain Barry said (so we are told) that he had 
given up the command of the finest ship afloat, and left the best employ, to cast 
his lot with the American Colonies. 

" He was idle but a few weeks, for Congress had voted to purchase and equip 
two vessels, the ' Lexington' and the ' Reprisal,' in December of the same year. 
Captain Barry was honored with the command of the ' Lexington,' named after 
the first battle of the American Revolution. It seems fortunate that he should start 
his naval career in a ship named after this first battle of a Revolution that was to 
have so great an influence upon the destinies not only of these United States but 
upon those of the whole civilized world, for as Americans we believe that we are 
to-day the greatest civilizing power on the face of the globe. 

" From the time of the fitting out of the ' Lexington.' in 1775, down to 
the time of the Declaration of Peace, which assured the liberation of the American 
Colonies from the thraldom of Great Britain. Captain Barry was constantly 
engaged, on shore and afloat, in building and equipping vessels, and in service at 
sea as opportunity afforded, when our little fleet could find an opening to get 
through the blockading squadrons of the enemy. Then on to the broad ocean, 

14 



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Captain Barry made the enemy feel the force of his rapid blows and of his 
genius as a seaman. He never struck his flag to the enemy, though he was 
actually engaged in twenty sea fights against superior force,- — the field of his 
operations ranging all the way from the capes of the Delaware into the West 
Indies and as far east as the coast of Maine and Newfoundland. 

" At the time of the British occupation of Philadelphia, our fleet was obliged 
to retreat up the river above Burlington, where, against the protest of Captain 
Barry, but by order of the Naval Commissioners, the few vessels composing it 
were scuttled and sunk. This was during those dark days of the Revolution before 
the battles of Princeton and Trenton, before the historic crossing of the Dela- 
ware by Washington and the dreary, discouraging days of that terrible winter at 
Valley Forge. 

" It was under these circumstances that Barry became closely associated with 
Washington as one of his staff, utilizing his resourcefulness as a seaman in supply- 
ing and manning flotillas of boats on the upper Delaware to facilitate the trans- 
portation of men and material of war, and taking part personally in the battles of 
Princeton and Trenton. He also fitted out a very successful flotilla of boats for 
service on the lower Delaware River, taking, from the enemy bound on its way 
up the river to Philadelphia, numerous important captures of powder, war sup- 
plies and other material, and happily diverting them to our army at Valley Forge. 
In fact, it was this captured powder alone that sustained Washington at that time. 
This flotilla of boats passed down the river at night, very much to the consterna- 
tion of the enemy, who was then enjoying the peace and serenity of the society 
of the city. 

" Then, in command of the ' Alliance,' Barry was assigned the signal duty 
of carrying abroad Colonel Laurens, special commissioner to France, on that all- 
important mission of securing for the United States an alliance with France, and 
obtaining the greatly needed supplies of money, ammunition, arms and clothing 
for our suffering army. He had the honor of carrying with him as passengers, 
the Marquis de Lafayette, Count de Noailles, Thomas Paine, Major Jackson, — 
all making up the bright galaxy of talent that was to assist our ambassador, Ben- 
jamin Franklin, to accomplish the delicate mission of securing that alliance and 
assistance which we, as colonists in rebellion, so sorely needed, and which made 
our rebellion a successful revolution. 



IS 



" Thus we see what confidence General Washington had in our grand old sea 
fighter. He was selected as the best and safest man to be trusted with so great a 
mission. At that very time we had Benedict Arnold and others of his ilk in our . 
midst, and Washington might well have said 'My Lord, whom can we trust?' 
Happily for us, there was one whom all could trust. The laurel on his head 
and the gold on his shoulders grew there! and neither the money of the enemy, 
nor the blandishments and offers of high command in the British Navy could 
pluck these laurels from his head or the gold from his shoulder knots. He was 
more than loyal ; he was God-given to us ! 

" We all know the grand success of the negotiations of our ambassador, 
Franklin, aided by our special commissioner, Colonel Laurens, and the efforts of 
the Marquis de Lafayette. How fortunate the relations thus established, and what 
great and crowning glory came to us through our alliance with France at that 
time. 

" Barry was the Captain who was entrusted with the grave responsibility of 
carrying this commission abroad through the lines of the enemy's blockading and 
cruising ships. This was a task both great and honorable and would have been 
quite enough for most men, but not for our hero. He was a fighter. It was 
not enough for him to avoid the enemy so as to carry his precious cargo in safety 
to its destination. Fight he must. And fight he did, both on his advance voyage 
to France and on his homeward trip. As a result of the engagements he cap- 
tured ten of the enemy's ships, sending some of his prizes into French ports and 
others to the United States. 

" But, friends, I might go on for an hour and yet not tell half of the story 
of the many other services rendered to the struggling Colonies by the man we 
are here to honor to-day. Suffice it to say that he was one of the brightest and 
noblest of those who came to us from the Emerald Isle, an Irish fisher-lad whose 
name and fame will live as long as the history of America lasts. 

" What you are doing to-day in honoring his memory is but an earnest of 
that better knowledge of our hero, which will grow with the history of our beloved 
country which he did so much to make a land of freedom. We have been so 
young as a nation that we have not had time to sit down calmly and think over 
the merits of all the men who fought that we might have the greatest country and 
the noblest government the world has ever known. We are thinking more about 

16 



the past than we did ; and, as we look back, we see the grand heroic figure of 
John Barry taking its rightful place among the defenders and saviors of the 
Republic." 

The proceedings were ended by prayer by one of the chaplains of the Society, 
Reverend Gerald P. Coghlan. The celebrations of a day ever to be remembered with 
pride and pleasure by every member of The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick closed 
in the evening with the largest banquet in its history, when more than five hun- 
dred sons of the Emerald Isle and their guests for hours joined in good cheer 
and listened to a wonderful flow of eloquence and song, prominent representa- 
tives of the National Government, of the Army and Navy of the United States, 
the Governor of Pennsylvania, the Mayor of our City and many eminent citizens 
being present. 

At the quarterly meeting of the Society, December 17, 1907, General 
St. Clair A. Mulholland, Chairman, submitted the final report of the Barry Statue 
Committee : 

Mr. Thomas D. Ferguson, Secretary, Philadelphia, December 17, 1907. 

Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. 

My Dear Sir: — The Committee on the erection of the Barry statue and memorial in Inde- 
pendence Square have the honor to make this, their final, report. The memorial to the great 
sailor has been erected in accordance with the wishes of the members of the Society. The total 
cost of the structure was Ten Thousand, Three Hundred (10,300) Dollars. It is not only a 
memorial to the father of the American Navy, but a monument to the ancient and honorable 
Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick as well, and will be, in all the centuries to come, a 
lasting honor to the Society as also to the great son of Ireland, the founder of our navy which, 
from its first inception to the present day, has furnished glowing pages to our country's history. 

The statue not only represents Commodore Barry true to life, but is a work of art which 
reflects credit on the artist, Mr. Samuel Murray. The granite work and pedestal (the work of the 
Harrison Granite Company) are also beautiful, enduring, and have met with the highest commen- 
dation of your committee. 

The committee wishes to record its appreciation of the courtesy and kindness e.xtended to 
its members by his Honor, John Weaver, then Mayor of our city, and to the members of Select 
and Common Council, to Alfred A. Eisenhower, Esq.. and to all those who assisted us in securing 
the location for the memorial. 

The statue was dedicated with impressive and most interesting ceremonies before a vast 
concourse of people on the sixteenth day of last March. 

Very respectfully, 

St. Clair A. Mulholland. 



17 



OFFICERS 

President, General Thomas J. Stewart 

Vice-President, Edward J. Dooner 

Treasurer, Simon J. Martin 

Secretary, Thomas D. Ferguson 

Counsellors, 
Thomas A. Fahy Robert Brannan 

Physicians, 
W. Joseph Hearn, M.D. Michael O'Hara, Jr., M.D. 

Finance Committee, 

Henry B. Tener Charles J. Gallagher, Jr. 

Thomas Cullinan, Jr. 

Executive Committee, 

Ephraim Brice Joseph J. McCaffrey 

John B. Comber 

Committee on Barry Statue, 

General St. Clair A. Mulholland Reverend J. Gray Bolton, D.D. 

Admiral George W. Melville Hugh McCaffrey 

Hon. Edwin S. Stuart Henry B. Tener 

Edward J. Dooner 

Dinner Committee, 

Edward J. Dooner James O'Sullivan 

John M. Campbell General Thomas J. Stewart, President. 

Hon. Theodore F. Jenkins Simon J. Martin, Treasurer. 

Hon. George D. McCreary Thomas D. Ferguson, Secretary. 



Committee on Barry Statue 

GENERAL St. CLAIR A. MULHOLLAND 
Hon. EDWIN S. STUART 
ADMIRAL GEORGE W. MELVILLE 
Reverend J. GRAY BOLTON, D. D. 

HUGH McCaffrey 

HENRY B. TENER 



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